This post from Duke blogger Tom Burroughs bears repeating – how can we get faculty to share what they’re thinking in blogs? If they’re spending two hours a day on email (not unusual), what would an occasional blog posting add to that, really?

It was just a plain flier, 8-1/2 by 11, taped to a few walls and easels here and there in the Hynes Convention Center during the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Boston. Be there: 3:15 p.m. Saturday. Hear what the Clinton and Obama campaigns are going to do about science and technology. The room was packed. Apparently the whole thing was whipped together in a day or two.

None of the Republican campaigns could send a representative, apparently. They said they were too busy; more likely they knew how few sympathetic minds there would be in an audience of academics.

The Obama side was presented by thirty-something Alec Ross, who said he left three pre-schoolers at home to participate. He’s a pale, unassuming guy, a little long-haired. You’d spot him for a liberal do-gooder from the get-go. Ross isa co-founder and Executive Vice President of a venture philanthropy outfit called One Economy Corp., which brings computers and broadband to low-income people. He said he met Obama as a state senator in Illinois a couple of years ago, well away from the TV cameras, and came away impressed by his “keen understanding of the role of technology in kids’ futures.” One Economy was bringing the Internets to some kids on the south side of Chicago at the time.

Ross was sincere, if a bit vague. I wanted to like the guy, I really did, but Hillary’s man had PowerPoint. Who can compete with that?!

Her guy was Thomas Kalil, 40-something, a bit fleshy, red in the face, aggressively short salt-n-pepper hair. I couldn’t see, but I’ll bet the cuff of his pants was just an inch too high. Washington all the way. He’s currently the Special Assistant to the Chancellor for Science and Technology at the University of California at Berkeley, which is just the sort of gig one gets after eight years in technology policy in the Bill Clinton White House and a start in the business as a semiconductor industry lobbyist.

The good news? We win either way. Both candidates are promising to “double” American investment in R&D through NIH, NSF, DOE, DOD, NIST: Clinton in 10 years; Obama in 5. “He’s going to be elected president, not emperor,” Ross said.

(Get specific, if you want; I don’t have the patience: Clinton’s slides were derived from this. Obama’s stuff is spread across several areas – get the whole book here. Most of it came from the technology chapter. Obama’s principal thing sounded like communications infrastructure … but maybe because that’s Ross’ thing?

Clinton’s best turn of phrase: “America is still an innovation superpower.” She’d set up an Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) for Energy. She’d spend on research to advance global health and homeland security. Oh, and she’s going to ask Hollywood to do for bench science what it did for blood spatters and semen swabs via “CSI.” At least that idea won’t cost billions we don’t have.

Obama would name a Chief Technology Officer for the country who would standardize and streamline federal IT infrastructure, and make everything more interoperable and transparent in the bargain. He’d put $150B over ten years into alternative energy, transportation, a digital electricity grid(?). He’d double federal funding for clean energy, using existing federal labs and land-grant schools (Go Spartans!).Without giving away too much of the plot, Ross said it’s a “bold and fully developed agenda,” nine pages in all.

First question from the floor (of more than a hundred submitted): Get specific!

Clinton: We are more specific.

Obama: Check out our web site, dude.For example, Obama would go after the $12B “universal service fund” which the telcos have apparently been using to build cell fone towers and lay copper wire — all for better voice service. Instead, Obama would redirect it to broadband. “We really get in the weeds on policy,” Ross said, which may have been his team’s best turn of phrase.

Clinton’s guy points out it’s easy to offer a hundred billion here and there, but we’ve got some real money issues in this country. Her solution would be to impose carbon caps and trading to raise revenue. Obama’s solution to the cash problem is to stop the war in Iraq – a rare applause line.

Contrast with McCain? He sucks, no argument.

Nuclear power? Clinton says we’ve got unanswered questions in waste, safety, proliferation and cost. Work those out and we’ll talk. Obama says, check out the site, but we’re about the same.

What’s the new Sputnik?
Twenty carbon-neutral terawatts by 2030, says Kalil. And lower the average age of first RO-1 funding, (currently edging toward 42).

Ross says invest and encourage women, minorities and immigrants. Obama is a “citizen of the world” and sees great strategic advantage in retaining the immigrants our universities and graduate programs are already attracting.

There was a little more, but really, they don’t sound all that different. It’s hard to judge through proxies like this, because we may have been hearing a reflection of the spokespeople, not the candidates. Voiced by Tom Kalil, Clinton’s proposals sounded specific, task-oriented, rooted in battle-hardened Washington reality. From Ross, Obama’s plans were loftier, more aspirational.

Tell you what: Help us get them to the podium for a real Science Debate on April 18.

Well, let’s set up the clip first: Researchers in New Zealand, at Duke and at the University of North Carolina collaborated on a large study that found a link between smoking marijuana more than once a week for years and having gum disease. The article ran in JAMA last week, and the good folks at JAMA made a movie of some really bad-looking gums.

If Thailand successfully reduced the infection rate of Dengue virus, how come more people were dying of the worst version of the infection?

The answer – after a lot of brutal number-crunching — lies in the way people develop immunity to the dengue virus. Basically, once you’ve had the fever, you’ve got about a year to run around unprotected in every mosquito-filled swamp you can find, trying to pick up the other three strains of the bug. If you don’t get your subsequent “challenges” quickly enough, the next time you get bitten, the virus uses your own antibodies to attack you. Charming things, viruses. Just charming.